I've posted many times about the issue I constantly face on Windows, not only on my machine, but fleet wide.
I was configuring group policy yesterday, all day, and the number of things that are either active or not restricted, is mind-blowing. Page after page of options that should be "Block - Enabled", or, "Security Enabled", by default, that you need to go in and set enabled, why? The number of options of protocols, encryption, caching, temping files, and so on, that should be blocked by default, again, head shaking. There are a few policies to prevent exposing your user details and notification on a lock screen, WTF? Why aren't those off by default?
I can understand that you might want those settings on, so, turn them on. Why not start with a reasonably secure baseline, and allow the user to pick what they want? Don't go full on bunker isolation mode, you'd already be running Qubes OS if you wanted that, just sensible, reasonable, medium security.
After all the stuff I've changed since November 2025, zero users have complained, which means all the settings should have been restrictive by default.
I can kind of support the cost argument Windows Server is expensive, but it's also bloated, and slow. I can count on zero hands the number of times I've wanted a GUI on a server, zero. I want my servers to serve things, not spend resources on the server OS, and I really can't afford for the servers to update, and become unresponsive, which is a known and accepted issue on Windows. The other reality most servers run a Unix or Linux variant, if Windows was ready for the server room, it would have the server room, and it's failed.